2d 1000
Rhode Island Hospital National Bank sued Swartz, Bresenoff, Yavner &
Jacobs, a firm of certified public accountants, each of the partners of the firm
and the estate of a deceased partner, alleging, inter alia, that the accountants had
negligently audited the financial statements of International Trading Corp. and
related companies in consequence of which the bank had made loans to
International which was unable to repay them, and the bank sustained a loss.
The District Court, sitting without a jury, concluded that the evidence failed to
establish "fraud or collusion on the part of Accountants, any lack of good faith,
misrepresentation, breach of duty, negligence, or failure to use reasonable care
in the preparation and issuance of the financial statements," and it dismissed the
complaint. We disagreed with the District Court's conclusions with regard to
negligence in our first consideration of this matter. We, therefore, reversed and
remanded the action to the District Court to determine if the bank had relied on
the accountants' negligent misrepresentations. Rhode Island Hospital Trust
National Bank v. Swartz, Bresenoff, Yavner & Jacobs, 4 Cir., 455 F.2d 847.
2
On remand, no new evidence was presented, and after reconsidering the issue,
the District Court found no reliance by the bank and therefore no right of
recovery. The District Court did go on to consider the question of damages, in
the event we should later find there was reliance. We do find reliance, and
direct the entry of judgment for the plaintiff for damages in the amount found
by the District Court.
In June 1964 International represented to the bank that during 1963 it had
expended $212,000 for leasehold improvements to facilities in Florida, Georgia
and Rhode Island. The work was purportedly done by International, using its
own labor and materials. In fact, the claimed 1963 leasehold improvements
were totally fictitious. The labor expenses claimed to have been incurred were
When the accountants transmitted the financial statements to their client, they
wrote a cover letter expressing certain reservations about the "fairness of the
accompanying statements." With respect to the critical item, the 1963 leasehold
improvements, however, the accountants' qualification was only to the effect
that since "fully complete detailed cost records were not kept * * * no exact
determination could be made as to the actual cost of said improvements." The
accountants made no suggestion that the improvements were nonexistent or
insubstantial.
10
After Toulmin finished briefly looking over them, he referred the statements to
the credit analysis department of the bank for detailed study. On September 24,
As of the date of receipt of the copies of the financial statements, June 24,
1964, International's total obligations to the bank were approximately $220,000.
Toulmin testified that if he had known on that date that $212,000. of
International's leasehold improvements were fictitious, no further credit would
have been extended. Toulmin stated that had the truth been known the account
would probably have been immediately assigned to the bank's classified loan
department for strenuous efforts to collect it. Since he was unaware of these
crucial facts, International's loan balance was allowed to increase during the
summer of 1964 until it reached $336,685.612 on September 24, 1964, the date
of the analysis department's adverse report.
12
13
In its first opinion, the District Court found that the accountants had broken no
duty in their audit and preparation of the financial statements and therefore
denied relief. We rejected this conclusion and found that the accountants had
been negligent. We then remanded the action to the District Court to determine
if the bank had relied on the erroneous reports. The District Court concluded
that the bank had not.
14
15
The issue before us is a narrow one: was the District Court clearly in error in
finding that the bank did not rely on the financial statements in extending credit
to International from June 24, 1964, to September 24, 1964?
16
We have already held that the accountants were negligent in conducting their
audit and preparing the statements. We determined before that the accountants'
disclaimer was insufficient to preclude a finding of negligence. Similarly, it fell
short of adequately alerting the bank to International's financial ills so grave as
to amount to a collapse. It is true that Toulmin was familiar with the difference
between a qualified and an unqualified financial report and one with a
The District Court reasoned that since the bank's loans to International were
secured by a pledge of inventories and accounts receivable (which were not
falsely represented), any reliance on misrepresented improvements was
immaterial. Such a conclusion overlooks the realities of the situation. The
bank's sole reason for allowing International to borrow beyond the established
maximum credit was its belief that International was using most of its operating
capital to make leasehold improvements. It was believed that these
improvements would significantly increase the efficiency of International's
cement handling operations and thereby produce greater profits in the near
future.5 The bank would have hardly continued to extend credit to International
if the 1963 financial statements had accurately pictured its financial situation.
Instead, the bank would have done as Toulmin testified-frozen the account and
attempted immediate collection.
18
The accountants have suggested that the circumstances surrounding the bank's
dealings with International were such that the bank was already convinced of
the existence of the fictitious improvements prior to receiving the 1963
financial statements.6 It is true that, prior to receiving the statements, the bank
had no reason to question the existence of the improvements it had been told
had been wrought in 1963. But it was due to the accountants' negligence that
the bank had no reason to question their existence after receiving the
statements. Had the bank been advised of International's actual position, the
disastrous operating losses in 1963 and the tremendous shrinkage in net worth,
it is obvious that the bank would not have acted as it did. This amounts to a
clear showing of reliance by the bank. It is immaterial that preceding
circumstances caused the bank to be more receptive to the false information.7
19
It can hardly be gainsaid that if the accountants had not misrepresented the
expenditure of substantial sums on leasehold improvements and had disclosed
the calamitous losses, one of two things would have happened. International
might have withheld the statements from the bank, but by late June surely the
time was close when the bank would stop all fresh credit because of its failure
to receive the statements it had been seeking since late March. If copies of a
true statement had been furnished the bank, it is obvious that disclosed
financial reverses would have deprived it of fresh credit. Either way,
International could not have continued to receive fresh credit without the aid of
the accountants' false statement.
20
The fact that the bank did not sever all financial relations with International
after Toulmin had received the critical analysis from his analysis department
does not mean that the bank did not rely on the accountants' statements. The
analysis, while strongly criticizing International's fiscal condition, did not
disclose that the 1963 improvements had never been made.
21
We are thus led to but one conclusion. The bank clearly did rely on the
accountants' audit and preparation of the financial statements to its detriment.
This coupled with the accountants' negligence gives the bank a cause of action.
We, therefore, reverse the District Court's judgment and direct the entry of a
judgment for the bank for damages in the amount determined by the District
Court.
22
Reversed.
The District Court arrived at this figure by starting with undisputed increased
liabilities of $27,217.50 from June 24, 1964, to September 24, 1964. As
mentioned in note 2, there was also an additional $90,000 on the books
committed to International. This sum was to be advanced in two increments of
$45,000 each, one on October 5, 1964, and the other on November 23, 1964.
The District Court could find no evidence of any loan, payment or advance of
$90,000 or any of $45,000 or any combination of advances showing $90,000.
There was, however, an advance of $40,000 on October 5, 1964. The District
Court assumed this sum was advanced as part of the $45,000 acceptance due on
that date and concluded that it should be included in the damages due the bank
4
Toulmin stated that at the time he received the financial statements he felt that
the corporation was making progress, that they had been initiating cost-cutting
improvements, which would show up in higher profits in the future, and that the
loan, while under margin * * * would-once the corporation rounded the corner,
as indicated by these improvements, would begin to pay down
[I]t is not required that the defendant shall have been the sole cause of the
damage; and indeed it is seldom, if ever, that the plaintiff is not influenced to
some extent by many other factors, most of which are not connected with the
defendant at all. It is enough that the representation has had a material influence
upon the plaintiff's conduct, and been a substantial factor in bringing about his
action
W. Prosser, Handbook of the Law of Torts ch. 20 Sec. 103 (3d ed. 1964).